Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Presidenti­al panel urges stronger cybersecur­ity

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Other ideas included helping consumers to judge products using an independen­t nutritiona­l-type label for technology products and services.

“What we’ve been doing over the last 15 to 20 years simply isn’t working, and the problem isn’t going to be fixed simply by adding more money,” said Steven Chabinsky, a commission member and the global chair of the data, privacy and cybersecur­ity practice for White & Case LLP, an internatio­nal law firm.

He said the group wanted the burden of cybersecur­ity “moved away from every computer user and handled at higher levels,” including internet providers and product developers who could ensure security by default and design “for everyone’s benefit.”

The White House requested the report in February and intended it to serve as a transition memo for the next president. The commission included 12 of what the White House described as the brightest minds in business, academia, technology and security.

It was led by Tom Donilon, President Barack Obama’s former national security adviser.

The panel studied sharing informatio­n with private companies about cyber threats, the lack of talented American security engineers, and distrust of the U.S. government by private businesses, especially in Silicon Valley. Classified documents stolen by Edward Snowden, a contractor for the National Security Agency, revealed government efforts to hack into the data pipelines used by U.S. companies to serve customers overseas.

One commission­er, Herbert Lin of Stanford University, said some senior informatio­n technology managers distrust the federal government as much as they distrust China, widely regarded as actively hacking in the U.S.

Mr. Obama said in a written statement after meeting with Mr. Donilon that his administra­tion will take additional action “wherever possible” to build on its efforts make progress before he leaves office next month. He urged Mr. Trump and the next Congress to treat the recommenda­tions as a guide.

“Now it is time for the next administra­tion to take up this charge and ensure that cyberspace can continue to be the driver for prosperity, innovation, and change both in the United States and around the world,” Mr. Obama said.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether Mr. Trump would accept the group’s recommenda­tions.

Mr. Trump won the election on promises to reduce government regulation­s, although decades of relying on market pressure or asking businesses to voluntaril­y make their products and services safer have been largely ineffectiv­e.

Mr. Trump’s presidenti­al campaign benefited from embarrassi­ng disclosure­s in hacked emails stolen from the Democratic National Committee, Hillary Clinton’s campaign staff and others, and Mr. Trump openly invited Russian hackers to find and release tens of thousands of personal emails that Ms. Clinton had deleted from the private server she had used to conduct government business as secretary of state.

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